>It's amazing what comes up in an actual disaster that never made it into our 
>semi-annual tests.

Considering the circumstances of a disaster, it wouldn't amaze me.
In 1969, the Canadian government started forcing all financial institutions, 
over a certain size, to implement a DR plan, and test it.

After the first few attempts, they came back to the Banks, and said: We hope 
you have the disaster you planned for!
They made the Banks get real, or they would start regulating it.

I worked for a company that never got to the point where a user could enter a 
transaction, nor submit a job, yet they classified all tests successful.

The classic example (written up in DR Journal) was a company, in New Orleans, 
during Katrina.
They had a DR Site in Arizona, got the apps up, the staff up, and even had a 
box of cell phones for everybody to use.
The problem was that the phones all had New Orleans' area codes.
So, nobody could call them because the CO servicing them was under water, hence 
offline.

-
Ted MacNEIL
eamacn...@yahoo.ca
Twitter: @TedMacNEIL

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